Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Linux Command


Basic Linux Commands


This section gives insight into the most important commands of your SuSE Linux system. Along with the individual commands, parameters are listed and, where appropriate, a typical sample application is introduced. To learn more about the various commands, it is usually possible to get additional information with the man program followed by the name of the command, for example, man ls.
In these manual pages, move up and down with PgUp and PgDn and move between the beginning and the end of a document with Home and End. End this viewing mode by pressing Q. Learn more about the mancommand itself with man.
There are many more commands than listed in this chapter. For information about other commands or more detailed information, we recommend the O'Reilly publication Linux in a Nutshell. In the following overview, the individual command elements are written in different typefaces.
  • The actual command is always printed as command. Without this, nothing can function.
  • Options without which the respective program cannot function are printed in italics.
  • Further details, like file names, which must be passed to a command for correct functioning, are written in the Courier font.
  • Specifications or parameters that are not required are placed in [brackets].
Adjust possible specifications to your needs. It makes no sense to write ls file(s), if no file named file(s) actually exists. You can usually combine several parameters, for example, by writing ls -la instead of ls -l -a.

File Administration


ls [option(s)] [file(s)]
If you run ls without any additional parameters, the program will list the contents of the current directory in short form.
-l
detailed list
-a
displays hidden files

cp [option(s)] sourcefile targetfile




Copies sourcefile to targetfile.

-i
Waits for confirmation, if necessary, before an existing targetfile is overwritten
-r
Copies recursively (includes subdirectories)

mv [option(s)] sourcefile targetfile




Copies sourcefile to targetfile then deletes the original sourcefile.

-b
Creates a backup copy of the sourcefile before moving
-i
Waits for confirmation, if necessary, before an existing targetfile is overwritten

rm [option(s)] file(s)




Removes the specified files from the file system. Directories are not removed by rm unless the option -r is used.

-r
Deletes any existing subdirectories
-i
Waits for confirmation before deleting each file.

ln [option(s)] sourcefile targetfile




Creates an internal link from the sourcefile to the targetfile, under a different name. Normally, such a link points directly to the sourcefile on one and the same file system. However, if ln is executed with the -s option, it creates a symbolic link that only points to the directory where the sourcefile is located, thus enabling linking across file systems.

-s
Creates a symbolic link

cd [options(s)] [directory]




Changes the current directory. cd without any parameters changes to the user's home directory.

mkdir [option(s)] directoryname




Creates a new directory.

rmdir [option(s)] directoryname




Deletes the specified directory, provided it is already empty.

chown [option(s)] username.group file(s)




Transfers the ownership of a file to the user with the specified user name.

-R
Changes files and directories in all subdirectories.

chgrp [option(s)] groupname file(s)




Transfers the group ownership of a given file to the group with the specified group name. The file owner can only change group ownership if a member of both the existing and the new group.

chmod [options] mode file(s)




Changes the access permissions.
The mode parameter has three parts: groupaccess, and access typegroup accepts the following characters:

u
user
g
group
o
others
For access, access is granted by the + symbol and denied by the - symbol.
The access type is controlled by the following options:

r
read
w
write
x
eXecute — executing files or changing to the directory.
s
Set uid bit — the application or program is started as if it were started by the owner of the file.

gzip [parameters] file(s)




This program compresses the contents of files, using complex mathematical algorithms. Files compressed in this way are given the extension .gz and need to be uncompressed before they can be used. To compress several files or even entire directories, use the tar command.

-d
decompresses the packed gzip files so they return to their original size and can be processed normally (like the command gunzip).

tar options archive file(s)




The tar puts one file or (usually) several files into an archive. Compression is optional.
tar is a quite complex command with a number of options available. The most frequently used options are:

-f
Writes the output to a file and not to the screen as is usually the case
-c
Creates a new tar archive
-r
Adds files to an existing archive
-t
Outputs the contents of an archive
-u
Adds files, but only if they are newer than the files already contained in the archive
-x
Unpacks files from an archive (extraction)
-z
Packs the resulting archive with gzip
-j
Compresses the resulting archive with bzip2
-v
Lists files processed
The archive files created by tar end with .tar. If the tar archive was also compressed using gzip, the ending is .tgz or .tar.gz. If it was compressed using bzip2.tar.bz2.
Application examples can be found in Section “Archives and Data Compression”.

locate pattern(s)




The locate command can find in which directory a specified file is located. If desired, use wild cards to specify file names. The program is very speedy, as it uses a database specifically created for the purpose (rather than searching through the entire file system). This very fact, however, also results in a major drawback: locate is unable to find any files created after the latest update of its database.
The database can be generated by root with updatedb.

updatedb [options(s)]




This command performs an update of the database used by locate. To include files in all existing directories, run the program as root. It also makes sense to place it in the background by appending an ampersand (&), so you can immediately continue working on the same command line (updatedb &).

find [option(s)]




The find command allows you to search for a file in a given directory. The first argument specifies the directory in which to start the search. The option -name must be followed by a search string, which may also include wild cards. Unlike locate, which uses a database, find scans the actual directory.

Commands to Access File Contents



cat [option(s)] file(s)
The cat command displays the contents of a file, printing the entire contents to the screen without interruption.
-n
Numbers the output on the left margin

less [option(s)] file(s)




This command can be used to browse the contents of the specified file. Scroll half a screen page up or down with PgUp and PgDn or a full screen page down with Space. Jump to the beginning or end of a file usingHome and End. Press Q to exit the program.

grep [option(s)] searchstring filenames




The grep command finds a specific searchstring in the specified file(s). If the search string is found, the command displays the line in which the searchstring was found along with the file name.

-i
Ignores case
-l
Only displays the names of the respective files, but not the text lines
-n
Additionally displays the numbers of the lines in which it found a hit
-l
Only lists the files in which searchstring does not occur

diff [option(s)] file1 file2




The diff command compares the contents of any two files. The output produced by the program lists all lines that do not match.
This is frequently used by programmers who need only send their program alterations and not the entire source code.

-q
Only reports whether the two given files differ

File Systems


mount [option(s)] [<device>] mountpoint
This command can be used to mount any data media, such as hard disks, CD-ROM drives, and other drives, to a directory of the Linux file system.
-r
mount read-only
-t filesystem
Specifies the file system. The most common are ext2 for Linux hard disks, msdos for MS-DOS media, vfat for the Windows file system, and iso9660 for CDs.

For hard disks not defined in the file /etc/fstab, the device type must also be specified. In this case, only root can mount. If the file system should also be mounted by other users, enter the option user in the appropriate line in the /etc/fstab file (separated by commas) and save this change. Further information is available in mount.

umount [option(s)] mountpoint




This command unmounts a mounted drive from the file system. To prevent data loss, run this command before taking a removable data medium from its drive. Normally, only root is allowed to run the commandsmount and umount. To enable other users to run these commands, edit the /etc/fstab file to specify the option user for the respective drive.

System Commands

System Information


df [option(s)] [directory]
The df (disk free) command, when used without any options, displays information about the total disk space, the disk space currently in use, and the free space on all the mounted drives. If a directory is specified, the information is limited to the drive on which that directory is located.
-H
shows the number of occupied blocks in gigabytes, megabytes, or kilobytes — in human-readable format
-t
Type of file system (ext2, nfs, etc.)

du [option(s)] [path]




This command, when executed without any parameters, shows the total disk space occupied by files and subdirectories in the current directory.

-a
Displays the size of each individual file
-h
Output in human-readable form
-s
Displays only the calculated total size

free [option(s)]




The command free displays information about RAM and swap space usage, showing the total and the used amount in both categories.

-b
Output in bytes
-k
Output in kilobytes
-m
Output in megabytes

date [option(s)]




This simple program displays the current system time. If run as root, it can also be used to change the system time. Details about the program are available in date.

Processes



top [options(s)]
top provides a quick overview of the currently running processes. Press H to access a page that briefly explains the main options to customize the program.
ps [option(s)] [process ID]
If run without any options, this command displays a table of all your own programs or processes — those you started. The options for this command are not preceded by hyphen.
aux
Displays a detailed list of all processes, independent of the owner.

kill [option(s)] process ID




Unfortunately, sometimes a program cannot be terminated in the normal way. However, in most cases, you should still be able to stop such a runaway program by executing the kill command, specifying the respective process ID (see top and ps).
kill sends a TERM signal that instructs the program to shut itself down. If this does not help, the following parameter can be used:

-9
Sends a KILL signal instead of a TERM signal, with which the process really is annihilated by the operating system. This brings the specific processes to an end in almost all cases.

killall [option(s)] processname




This command is similar to kill, but uses the process name (instead of the process ID) as an argument, causing all processes with that name to be killed.

Network


ping [option(s)] host name|IP address
The ping command is the standard tool for testing the basic functionality of TCP/IP networks. It sends a small data packet to the destination host, requesting an immediate reply. If this works, ping displays a message to that effect, which indicates that the network link is basically functioning.
-c
number Determines the total number of packages to send and ends after they have been dispatched. By default, there is no limitation set.
-f
flood ping: sends as many data packages as possible. A popular means, reserved to root, to test networks.
-i
value Specifies the interval between two data packages in seconds. Default: one second

nslookup




The Domain Name System resolves domain names to IP addresses. With this tool, send queries to information servers (DNS servers).

telnet [option(s)] host name or IP address

 

Open Port 25 on Linux machine for SMTP send-email feature

man ufw for policies
or
sudo ufw allow 25

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